- Source: Irene Taylor (filmmaker)
Irene Taylor (born June 15, 1970) is a film director and producer.
Early life
Taylor was born on June 15, 1970, to deaf parents Sally and Paul Taylor. She graduated from New York University and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.
Career
Taylor began her documentary career in photojournalism. Her first feature documentary, Hear and Now, a documentary memoir about her deaf parents, won the Audience Award at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, a Peabody Award, and numerous awards at festivals around the world. It was also nominated by the Producers Guild of America in 2008 for Documentary of the Year. Her HBO feature documentary Beware the Slenderman received two 2017 Critics' Choice Award nominations, for Best Director and Best Documentary, and was also nominated for a 2018 Emmy Award.
Taylor's previous credits include several theatrically released short films, all which aired on HBO. The Final Inch, about the global effort to eradicate polio, was nominated for an Academy award, multiple Emmys, and won the IDA's Pare Lorentz Award. After the 2010 Gulf oil spill, she followed the life of a single bird found coated in oil, and made Saving Pelican 895 which won an Emmy for its affecting music. She directed One Last Hug: Three Days at Grief Camp, which won the 2014 Prime Time Emmy for Best Children's Programming. In 2016 she released Open Your Eyes, about an aging couple living in the Himalayas determined to regain their sight. Taylor's short opinion film Between Sound and Silence was released by The New York Times Op-Docs.
Taylor's early career began in Kathmandu, Nepal, working as a Himalayan Mountain guide and author. Her photography book, Buddhas in Disguise, became the basis for her first documentary film, made in 1993 with the United Nations. She was a producer for CBS Sunday Morning, and founded her production company Vermilion Films in 2006.
In 2019, Taylor made Moonlight Sonata: Deafness in Three Movements about her deaf son, her deaf father and Beethoven, as he went deaf while writing his famous sonata. It premiered at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival, and was nominated for a 2020 PrimeTime Emmy Award for Special Merit in Documentary Filmmaking. That year, Taylor founded The Treehouse Project, a nonprofit forging broader accessibility to documentary film.
Taylor's film Leave No Trace: A Hidden History of the Boy Scouts premiered at the 2022 Tribeca Film Festival, and won a 2022 Columbia-DuPont award.
In 2021 it was announced that Taylor would be working with Sony Music on a documentary about the French-Canadian singer Celine Dion. The film, I Am: Celine Dion, was released on June 21, 2024.
Taylor's documentaries have appeared on HBO, Hulu, CBS, A&E, Fox, and the History Channel.
Filmography
2007: Hear and Now
2009: The Final Inch
2011: Saving Pelican 895
2014: One Last Hug: Three Days at Grief Camp
2015: Open Your Eyes
2016: Beware the Slenderman
2017: The Life Story
2018: The Listening Project
2018: Homeless: The Soundtrack
2018: Between Sound and Silence
2019: Moonlight Sonata
2022: Leave No Trace: A Hidden History of the Boy Scouts
2023: Trees and Other Entanglements
2024: I Am: Celine Dion
Awards and nominations
2004: Emmy Award for an "Outstanding Feature in a Regularly Scheduled Broadcast", Heart of the Country
2007: Sundance Film Festival Audience Award, Hear and Now
2008: Peabody Award, Hear and Now
2009: Nominee for Academy Award, The Final Inch
2016: Critics' Choice Documentary Awards: Nominee for Best Documentary Feature and for Best Direction of a Documentary Feature for Beware the Slenderman
2020: Nominee for Emmy in Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking, Moonlight Sonata: Deafness in Three Movements
2022: Columbia duPont Award for Excellence in Broadcast, Documentary and Online Journalism for Leave No Trace: A Hidden History of the Boy Scouts
Select works
1997 – Buddhas in Disguise: Deaf People of Nepal? San Diego, California: DawnSignPress. ISBN 978-0-915-03559-5; OCLC 36364073; the book's stories and photographs shed light on the Deaf culture and community in Nepal.
1999 – I Witness: Polygamy. Amazon Prime Video. Main videographer and a producer of five 24-minute episodes on Alex Joseph's polygamist family just before Joseph died of liver cancer.
See also
International Documentary Association
Mohammad Gulzar Saifi
Notes
References
"Academy Award Recognition for India's Fight to Eradicate Polio," UNICEF. February 18, 2009.
Deburge, Peter. "Sundance 2007: Hear and Now (Documentary)," Variety. January 20, 2007.
"Not just Slumdog..., The Final Inch too in Oscar race," CNN-IBN (Cable News Network-Indian Broadcasting Network) February 3, 2009.
Pandey, Geeta. "Final Inch towards the Oscars," BBC News. February 19, 2009.
External links
Irene Taylor at IMDb
Vermilion Films
Auburn University